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Dive into the research topics where Shina Kawai is active.

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Featured researches published by Shina Kawai.


BJUI | 2011

Transurethral incision of congenital obstructive lesions in the posterior urethra in boys and its effect on urinary incontinence and urodynamic study.

Shigeru Nakamura; Shina Kawai; Taro Kubo; Toshiharu Kihara; Kenichi Mori; Hideo Nakai

Study Type – Therapy (case series)
Level of Evidence 4


Journal of Pediatric Urology | 2013

A multi-center study of pediatric uroflowmetry data using patterning software

Akihiro Kanematsu; Shiro Tanaka; Kazuyoshi Johnin; Shina Kawai; Shigeru Nakamura; Masaaki Imamura; Koji Yoshimura; Higuchi Y; Shingo Yamamoto; Yusaku Okada; Hideo Nakai; Osamu Ogawa

OBJECTIVE We created software for patterning uroflowmetry (UFM) curves, and validated its utility. PATIENTS AND METHODS The software patterns a given UFM curve upon four parameters: sex, voided volume, maximal flow rate, and amplitude of fluctuation. Using the software, 6 urologists from 4 institutes assessed 30 test curves. Further, 329 UFM curves obtained from children presenting to 3 institutes for daytime and/or nighttime wetting were assessed. Clinical presentation was divided into 3 groups: group A, daytime incontinence; group B, non-monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis without daytime wetting; and group C, monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis. RESULTS Using the software, inter-rater agreement ranged from 0.85 to 1.00 (mean, 0.93 ± 0.04). It could pattern 310 out of 329 clinical curves. In each institute, the tower pattern was prevalent according to severity of daytime symptoms, although not significantly. The merged data showed that the percent tower pattern significantly correlated with presence of daytime symptoms (groups A, B, and C, 29.7%, 27.0%, and 16.3%, respectively; p < 0.05). No correlation with daytime symptoms was noted for fluctuated (staccato and interrupted) and plateau patterns. CONCLUSION The software creates a common platform for evaluating pediatric UFM, enabling extraction of common and biased features of different cohorts, and their integration into one single cohort.


Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research | 2013

Labial adhesion causing voiding but not sexual problems in a married woman

Takashi Watanabe; Shigeki Matsubara; Tomoe Ikeda; Shina Kawai; Shigeru Nakamura; Hideo Nakai

A married woman of reproductive age had labial adhesion with voiding difficulty. She and her husband had not been bothered by their inability to engage in sexual intercourse for the 10 years of their marriage. Surgical incision and reconstruction disclosed the normal vaginal vestibule and urethral meatus. Six months after surgery, her labium was fully open without recurrence. We must be aware that labial adhesion may occur and be hidden in a woman of reproductive age, even when the patient does not notice any ‘abnormality’ in her genitalia.


World Journal of Urology | 2017

The changes of urethral morphology recognized in voiding cystourethrography after endoscopic transurethral incision for posterior urethral valve in boys with intractable daytime urinary incontinence and nocturnal enuresis

Taiju Hyuga; Shigeru Nakamura; Shina Kawai; Taro Kubo; Rieko Furukawa; Toshinori Aihara; Makiko Naka Mieno; Hideo Nakai

PurposeEndoscopic transurethral incision (TUI) of posterior urethral valve (PUV) can improve daytime urinary incontinence (DUI) and nocturnal enuresis (NE). However, the underlying mechanism has not been elucidated. In this study, we retrospectively examined the mobility of the urethra before and after TUI by measuring the urethral angle with voiding cystourethrography (VCUG), to clarify the effects of TUI on the morphology of the urethra during voiding.MethodsBetween July 2010 and December 2014, 29 boys with intractable DUI and/or NE were diagnosed as PUV and underwent endoscopic TUI. VCUG during voiding phase was performed at sequential radiographic spot images (1 image per second) at a 45° angle in oblique standing position. The point at which the angle of the urethra was the smallest during urination was regarded as the minimum urethral angle. The maximum urethral angle during early voiding phase was compared with the minimum urethral angle, and the percentage by which this angle changed was calculated as the flexion rate. Then changes in minimum urethral angle and flexion rate were analyzed before and 3–4 months after TUI.ResultsAfter TUI, the minimum urethral angle on VCUG became more obtuse (before vs. after TUI, respectively: 112.7 vs. 124.5°, p < 0.001), the flexion rate decreased (before vs. after TUI, respectively: 11.8 vs. 4.1%, p < 0.001).ConclusionsThis study demonstrated a significant difference in the degree of change. The findings may contribute to understanding of the mechanism of improvement in symptoms after TUI in patients with PUV.


Investigative and Clinical Urology | 2017

Aggressive diagnosis and treatment for posterior urethral valve as an etiology for vesicoureteral reflux or urge incontinence in children

Hideo Nakai; Taiju Hyuga; Shina Kawai; Taro Kubo; Shigeru Nakamura

Vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) is one of the most common diseases in pediatric urology and classified into primary and secondary VUR. Although posterior urethral valve (PUV) is well known as a cause of the secondary VUR, it is controversial that minor urethral deformity recognized in voiding cystourethrography represents mild end of PUV spectrum and contributes to the secondary VUR. We have been studying for these ten years congenital urethral obstructive lesions with special attention to its urethrographic and endoscopic morphology as well as therapeutic response with transurethral incision. Our conclusion to date is that congenital obstructive lesion in the postero-membranous urethra is exclusively PUV (types 1 and 3) and that severity of obstruction depends on broad spectrum of morphological features recognized in PUV. Endoscopic diagnostic criteria for PUV are being consolidated.


European Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2015

The Endoscopic Morphological Features of Congenital Posterior Urethral Obstructions in Boys with Refractory Daytime Urinary Incontinence and Nocturnal Enuresis

Shigeru Nakamura; Taiju Hyuga; Shina Kawai; Taro Kubo; Hideo Nakai

Purpose This study aims to evaluate the endoscopic morphological features of congenital posterior urethral obstructions in boys with refractory daytime urinary incontinence and/or nocturnal enuresis. Patients and Methods A total of 54 consecutive patients underwent endoscopy and were diagnosed with a posterior urethral valve (PUV) (types 1-4). PUV type 1 was classified as severe, moderate, or mild. A transurethral incision (TUI) was mainly performed for anterior wall lesions of the PUV. Voiding cystourethrography and pressure flow studies (PFS) were performed before and 3 to 4 months after TUI. Clinical symptoms were evaluated 6 months after TUI, and outcomes were assessed according to PFS waveform pattern groups (synergic pattern [SP] and dyssynergic pattern [DP]). Results All patients had PUV type 1 and/or 3 (i.e., n = 34 type 1, 7 type 3, and 13 types 1 and 3). There were severe (n = 1), moderate (n = 21), and mild (n = 25) cases of PUV type 1. According to PFS, SP and DP were present in 43 and 11 patients, respectively. TUI was effective in the SP group and symptoms improved in 77.4 and 69.3% of patients with daytime incontinence and nocturnal enuresis, respectively. Almost no effect was observed in the DP group. A significant decrease in the detrusor pressure was observed at maximum flow rate using PFS in the SP group. Conclusions PUV type 1 encompassed lesions with a spectrum of obstructions ranging from severe to mild, with mild types whose main obstructive lesion existed at the anterior wall of urethra occurring most frequently in boys with refractory daytime urinary incontinence and/or nocturnal enuresis.


Pediatrics International | 2017

Top-down approach is possible strategy for predicting breakthrough fUTIs and renal scars in infants

Shina Kawai; Takahiro Kanai; Taiju Hyuga; Shigeru Nakamura; Jun Aoyagi; Takane Ito; Takashi Saito; Jun Odaka; Rieko Furukawa; Toshinori Aihara; Hideo Nakai

Acute‐phase technetium‐99 m dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy is recommended for initial imaging in children with febrile urinary tract infection (fUTI). Recently, the importance of identifying patients at risk of recurrent fUTI (r‐fUTI) has been emphasized. To clarify the effectiveness of DMSA scintigraphy for predicting r‐fUTI in infants, we investigated the relationship between defects on DMSA scintigraphy and r‐fUTI.


Medicine | 2017

Renal dysplasia characterized by prominent cartilaginous metaplasia lesions in VACTERL association: A case report.

Takeo Nakaya; Taiju Hyuga; Yukichi Tanaka; Shina Kawai; Hideo Nakai; Toshiro Niki; Akira Tanaka

Background: Renal dysplasia is the most important cause of end-stage renal disease in children. The histopathological characteristic of dysplasia is primitive tubules with fibromuscular disorganization. Renal dysplasia often includes metaplastic cartilage. Metaplastic cartilage in renal dysplasia has been explained as occurring secondary to vesicoureteral reflux (VUR). Additionally, renal dysplasia is observed in renal dysplasia-associated syndromes, which are combinations of multiple developmental malformations and include VACTERL association. Case presentation: We observed the following multiple developmental malformations in a 108-day-old male infant during a nephrectomy: a nonfunctioning right kidney with VUR, hemidiaphragmatic eventration, a ventricular septal defect (VSD) with tetralogy of Fallot in the heart, cryptorchidism, and hyperdactylia. These developmental anomalies satisfied the diagnostic criteria for VACTERL association. A surgical specimen of the right nonfunctioning kidney revealed prominent cartilaginous metaplasia in the renal dysplasia with VUR. The densities of the ectopic cartilaginous lesions in this nonfunctioning kidney were extraordinarily high compared with other renal dysplasia cases. Giemsa banding of his genome produced normal results. The patient has not undergone further detailed genomic investigation. Conclusion: This case might be a novel type of VACTERL association, that is, renal dysplasia combined with prominent cartilaginous metaplasia, tetralogy of Fallot and VSD of the heart, hemidiaphragmatic eventration, and hyperdactylia.


The Journal of Urology | 2016

Long-Term Outcome of Low Scrotal Approach Orchiopexy without Ligation of the Processus Vaginalis

Taiju Hyuga; Shina Kawai; Shigeru Nakamura; Taro Kubo; Hideo Nakai

PURPOSE We performed low scrotal approach orchiopexy in patients with prescrotal cryptorchidism. The processus vaginalis was not ligated if it was not widely patent. We retrospectively evaluated the long-term outcomes of low scrotal approach orchiopexy without processus vaginalis ligation. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 137 patients (227 testes) were diagnosed with prescrotal cryptorchidism between October 2009 and April 2014. All patients underwent low scrotal approach orchiopexy. Mean age at surgery was 34.9 months. The processus vaginalis was deemed to be not widely patent when a sound could not be passed into the abdominal cavity through the internal inguinal ring, and the processus vaginalis was not ligated in such cases. RESULTS Intraoperative findings revealed that the processus vaginalis was widely patent in 10 testes and was not widely patent in 217. A widely patent processus vaginalis was closed via scrotal approach in 5 testes, while an inguinal approach was necessary in 5. Median followup was 44 months (range 20 to 73). Postoperative complications included reascending testis in 1 case where an inguinal approach was necessary. No patient manifested testicular atrophy or inguinal hernia. CONCLUSIONS Low scrotal approach orchiopexy is a useful and safe procedure for treating patients with prescrotal cryptorchidism. Ligation is unnecessary when the processus vaginalis is not widely patent.


The Journal of Urology | 2015

Long-Term Outcome of the Pippi Salle Procedure for Intractable Urinary Incontinence in Patients with Severe Intrinsic Urethral Sphincter Deficiency

Shigeru Nakamura; Taiju Hyuga; Shina Kawai; Hideo Nakai

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Taiju Hyuga

Jichi Medical University

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Hideo Nakai

Jichi Medical University

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Taro Kubo

Jichi Medical University

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Hideo Nakai

Jichi Medical University

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Rieko Furukawa

Jichi Medical University

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Akira Tanaka

Jichi Medical University

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